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My first Prius - 2013 III with 131k miles for $6800. Question about premium gas

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Main Forum' started by Yerbluez, Mar 8, 2020.

  1. Yerbluez

    Yerbluez Junior Member

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    Hi all,

    I just purchased a 2013 Prius III yesterday, and love it so far! I am coming from a 2000 Tundra, so an really looking forward to getting around without eating up so much gas. I bought it from the original owner who had it maintained at the Toyota dealer. Looks like they've kept up with most everything the dealer recommended, although according to records they declined some services, like PCV Valve replacement and a few other things.

    My question pertains to the use of premium fuel. The original owner has used premium 93 octane fuel in the Prius since they bought it. Would there be any issues switching to regular 87 octane at this point?

    Thanks!
     

    Attached Files:

  2. jburg

    jburg Member

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    There would be no issues switching to 87 octane; however, if you have a Costco membership or can afford it, I would continue to use premium. Premium fuels (if Top Tier - Exxon, Shell, Costco, Marathon, etc.) have more detergents than regular. The 2010-2014 models have a piston design flaw in which the oil ring gets gummed up with varnish and carbon. I have just started running premium fuel exclusively and ran 6 tanks of PEA injector cleaner through mine and the oil burn on my vehicle has stopped. The car is fuel-efficient, I would continue to use premium honestly.

    Are there records of the EGR valve and EGR pipe subassembly being replaced?

    What about tune-up (plugs) at 120k?

    Coolant - Radiator and invertor should have been addressed at 100k and 50k thereafter.

    CVT (transmission fluid) - 100k and 50k thereafter. (In the 2010 this is supposed to be a 'lifetime' fluid)

    Brake fluid should also be changed every 5 yrs or 50k miles - I know that this is ahead of the maintanence schedule, but the GenIII used DOT3 which degrades faster than other, newer fluids and the life will start to go down around 3 years depending on the environment.
     
    #2 jburg, Mar 8, 2020
    Last edited: Mar 8, 2020
  3. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    There is no need for premium in a Prius
    And get the egr circuit cleaned before she blows a head gasket
     
  4. jburg

    jburg Member

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    Yes, the car is rated and tuned for 87 octane, but my inclination is that using premium Top Tier will keep the rings happier longer.

    Either that or religiously use 12oz Techron every 3k and Top Tier 87.
     
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  5. Yerbluez

    Yerbluez Junior Member

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    Thanks for the advice Jburg! I do have a Costco membership, and being that is super fuel efficient and Costco fuel is usually priced low I will take your advice and continue to use premium, especially if that will help with the oil burn issue. I had read that the 3rd gens up to 2015 have that issue, so it is something I plan to monitor.

    I have not had a chance to go through all the records - the printout I have from the dealer is just a list of what has been done since the beginning, and only provides a short description for each item. I don't see EGR valve right off the bat. Is that something I need to address immediately if so?

    Also, it looks like the previous owner declined the "Hybrid Invertor Service and BG Coolant Flush" in 2019, so I assume those are what you are talking about in regards to coolant? Plugs have not been done either, so I guess I ought to add that to the list.

    It appears that the Hybrid Trans Fluid was changed in 2019. That seems to be the only thing that has been done from what I can tell that you listed...

    Goes to show that, even with 1 owner and dealer maintained, a lot of things can be missed. In order of most critical to least, which would you think I need to address first?

    I plan to do some reading up to become more familiar with all of recommended maintenance soon here, but thanks for this run down, it's a good starting point!
     
  6. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    they prollyknew they were going to sell it, and skipped the big 120k service
     
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  7. Yerbluez

    Yerbluez Junior Member

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    Sounds about right. I'm just hoping that all the maintenance they declined doesn't all the sudden cause this to be a lemon of a car. I know these are very reliable, but as far as I can tell even something as basic as a tune up wasn't done now that I have the records.
     
  8. Ronald Doles

    Ronald Doles Active Member

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    I found this quote in an article that I was reading.

    The Federal Trade Commission, notes: “In most cases, using a higher-octane gasoline than your owner’s manual recommends offers absolutely no benefit. It won’t make your car perform better, go faster, get better mileage or run cleaner.”
     
  9. JimboPalmer

    JimboPalmer Tsar of all the Rushers

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    Regular is fine for a Prius. That is why it is recommenced in the manual.
     
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  10. jburg

    jburg Member

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    Yes, you need to find a shop that will take apart your EGR circuit and clean it out (if you can't do it yourself). Failure to do is suspected to be the cause of premature head gasket failure. It is quite an involved job - especially the EGR cooler/pipe sub-assembly (I just had the intake manifold off on my wife's 2010 GenIII yesterday to reclean the EGR passages and that took me 1.5 hours and I have done it before) This is the most pressing issue.
    See these videos:




    *Note: NutzAboutBolts is a member here, but doesn't go into the cleaning of the EGR channels in the intake manifold. This is honestly way more important than getting the oil build-up out of the part.

    Based on what it is saying here. It looks like they changed the CVT fluid - Hybrid Trans Fluid (it's just a drain and refill ~4 qts) and as bisco said, looks like they skipped the 120k services - spark plugs and coolants, etc.

    You can change out the plugs when you have the windshield wiper cowl off to address the EGR cooler. The antifreeze and inverter coolant are a simple drain and refill. You just have to remove the lower plastic skirt and 'burp' the system. There are videos for both.
     
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  11. jburg

    jburg Member

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    Yes, in most cases; however, the mid-2000 crap piston design from Toyota on the Prii and other vehicles is not "most cases."

    Top tier premium without a doubt has more detergent in the add pack.
     
  12. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    you're not that far over, it's no big deal. log in to toyota.com/owners and plug in your vin for more service information
     
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  13. JimboPalmer

    JimboPalmer Tsar of all the Rushers

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    "TOP TIER™ fuel marketers are required to use TOP TIER™ for all for all octane grades of gasoline and diesel sold at their stations." - Frequently Asked Questions - Consumers

    "Retailers are required to:
    • Meet the minimum TOP TIER™ Detergent Gasoline standard.
    • Sell TOP TIER™ Detergent Gasoline for all grades and at all stations if you are a gasoline retailer." - How to Become Licensed
    Neither of these statements prevent you from adding more than recommended, but absolutely nothing hints that retailers do, in general.

    Remember "nothing is better than" just means that they are all the same.
     
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  14. Yerbluez

    Yerbluez Junior Member

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    Awesome, thanks for posting these. I'll take a look and see if it's something I could handle, otherwise I know a solid Toyota mechanic in the area.



     
  15. jburg

    jburg Member

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    While I agree that there is no incentive to do this, based on my results, I will continue to use Top Tier premium.
     
  16. jburg

    jburg Member

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    Well, I have proved myself wrong on Costco premium at least.

    The only manufacturer that I could find that specifies they use more detergents in their premium blend is Shell V-Power NiTRO+

    "Octane levels are the only difference between regular and premium unleaded gasoline sold at Costco."

    So my results seem to have been from the PEA (Techron, etc.) additive only.
     
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  17. Grit

    Grit Senior Member

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    More by how much more parts per million compared to the average tier gas?
     
  18. jburg

    jburg Member

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    They don't specify. Also ExxonMobil Supreme+ claims to have more detergent as compared to their regular and midgrade as well.
     
  19. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk EGR Fanatic

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    I don't know one way or the other, but suspect there's no point to using Premium. Here's something I found:

    Premium vs. Regular | Car Talk

    I'll trot out my boiler plate info regarding EGR cleaning:

    The simplest way to see where you're at, is to check the degree of carbon build up in the EGR pipe, a stainless steel connecting pipe between the EGR valve and intake manifold. Watch @NutzAboutBolts video #16 here:

    Nutz About Bolts Prius Maintenance Videos | PriusChat

    Two or three other videos linked there too, for the full cleaning of the intake manifold, full EGR clean, and Oil Catch Can install.

    Good thread:

    EGR & Intake Manifold Clean Results | PriusChat

    Another:

    Oil Catch Can, Eliminate that knock! | PriusChat

    Some tools worth having:

    E8 Torx socket (mandatory)
    E6 Torx socket (optional, but good to have, to remove the throttle body studs from intake manifold)
    3/8" ratchet wrench, regular and long handle, flex head, you can never have enough (or 1/2 plus reducer)
    1/4" ratchet wrench, or 3/8" to 1/4" reducer
    Ratchet extensions: you can never have enough
    Long needle nose piers, straight and bent tip
    Ratcheting 12mm box wrench (optional, but makes disconnection of the EGR cooler from exhaust easier)
    Torque wrench (3/8" and 1/4" both good to have)
    Floor jack and safety stands (or ramps): basically some method to raise front, if you need to take underpanel off, which you may need to, both for access and to recover dropped items.

    Comment regarding clamping of coolant hose, mentioned and or shown in videos:

    1. When removing the intake manifold for cleaning, you do need to lift the throttle body off the intake manifold. Still, the coolant hoses connected to the throttle body have ample slack, enough that you can leave them connected, and just tie the throttle body to something adjacent, say the inverter wiring harness.

    2. When removing the EGR cooler, removing coolant hoses is necessary, but if you drain 2 liters/quarts from the radiator drain spigot prior (into a clean container), the coolant level in the system will be dropped below the EGR componennts, and you won't spill anything. Just be sure to not tip the cooler when lifting it off (and catch the rear gasket): there are a few tablespoons of coolant trapped at the lower back corner.

    Pour that into your previous drained coolant, and when done pour it back into the reservoir. If you've got the coolant bleed bolt (2010, 2011 model years), leave it open while pouring the coolant back in, till coolant starts coming out. For later model years, leave the topmost coolant hose on EGR disconnected till coolant starts coming out. Also, might help to burp the main radiator hose as you pour the coolant back in.
     
  20. Grit

    Grit Senior Member

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    Every top tier oil company claims that their has more detergents than all other competitors. I'll give Shell credit though, they have the most ads and the best PR marketing team (y)